{{$store.state.data.search.serverData.config.placeholder}}

{{ vm.heading }}

{{ vm.closeTabLabel }}

Notice of updates
!

Since the last time you logged in our privacy statement has been updated. We want to ensure that you are kept up to date with any changes and as such would ask that you take a moment to review the changes. You will not continue to receive KPMG subscriptions until you accept the changes.

Hi
!

Our privacy policy has been updated since the last time you logged in

We want to make sure you're kept up to date. Please take a moment to review these changes. You will not receive KPMG subscription messages until you agree to the new policy.

Global Chair of Industrial Manufacturing and Global Head of Aerospace & Defense

KPMG in the U.S.

Contact

Related content

Few (if any) manufacturing CEOs doubt the importance of Industry 4.0. Not just because it’s secured the headline of every conference, magazine and boardroom agenda for 2017. But more because of the promise of significant value and performance-improvement that could be secured by leveraging Industry 4.0 approaches ‘at scale’.

The vision painted by promoters is alluring. With data and digits streaming across the production, operation and supply lines in real-time, friction within the supply chain and operations will finally be released. Automation will enable faster cycle times and changeovers, removing significant waste and downtime. Machine learning and predictive analytics will enable continuous improvement. Forecasting will be highly reliable; R&D will be highly collaborative; quality will be highly assured.

To manufacturing CEOs, this may sound like the panacea to many of their current ills. Everyone knows the manufacturing operating environment has changed. And manufacturing leaders are feeling the pressure of greater customer choice, the proliferation of sales channels and shorter product life cycles. They are seeing their sourcing networks become more complicated, demand for faster changeovers rising and fulfillment times shrinking. Operational stability is being challenged on a daily basis.

Talk to any manufacturing CEO and they’ll likely reel off a list of ‘Industry 4.0’ initiatives underway at their organization. But delve a little deeper and it quickly becomes clear that most (if not all) represent little more than pilot projects aimed at solving a particular pain point or isolated performance issue. Few possess a clear roadmap for scaling up their Industry 4.0 activities and investments. Fewer still can boast alignment between their Industry 4.0 initiatives and their long-term strategic objectives at any significant scale.

At KPMG, we see the shift towards Industry 4.0 as an evolution in performance improvement – a set of capabilities, technologies, approaches and methodologies that, when combined and applied to a specific business challenge, can deliver unprecedented advantages to those that take a strategic approach. To be clear, Industry 4.0 is not about technology. And it’s not about Big Data. It’s about performance.

The real question facing most CEOs, therefore, is how to use Industry 4.0 to deliver game-changing performance improvement for their organization, not only through operational improvements, but also by using their insights to restructure the industry operating model from end-to-end in ways that were unimaginable just a decade ago.

Recently, as part of a global benchmarking effort, a team of our Manufacturing professionals sat down with key decision makers from some of the world’s largest, most innovative manufacturers to talk about their approach to Industry 4.0. We asked them about their strategic approach, their investment strategies and their long-term expectations. And we asked for an honest assessment of where they are today.

What we found was a set of leaders that were increasingly focused on improving the strategic alignment between their business objectives and their Industry 4.0 investments. But we also found that most continued to struggle to move from pilots to profits – to achieve the type of scale and integration that is required to deliver real and sustainable results.

This is a shame. Massive value awaits those with the right roadmap for scaling up their Industry 4.0 success. Those without a clear direction and strategy will risk being left behind.

Stay tuned for more as we release our Industry 4.0 Benchmarking report in the next few weeks.

Member firms of the KPMG network of independent firms are affiliated with KPMG International. KPMG International provides no client services. No member firm has any authority to obligate or bind KPMG International or any other member firm vis-à-vis third parties, nor does KPMG International have any such authority to obligate or bind any member firm.